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Cited 95 time in webofscience Cited 109 time in scopus
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Dietary supplementation of young broiler chickens with Capsicum and turmeric oleoresins increases resistance to necrotic enteritisopen access

Authors
Lee, Sung HyenLillehoj, Hyun S.Jang, Seung I.Lillehoj, Erik P.Min, WongiBravo, David M.
Issue Date
14-Sep-2013
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Keywords
Capsicum; Turmeric; Chickens; Necrotic enteritis; Immunology
Citation
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, v.110, no.5, pp 840 - 847
Pages
8
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume
110
Number
5
Start Page
840
End Page
847
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/20477
DOI
10.1017/S0007114512006083
ISSN
0007-1145
1475-2662
Abstract
The Clostridium-related poultry disease, necrotic enteritis (NE), causes substantial economic losses on a global scale. In the present study, a mixture of two plant-derived phytonutrients, Capsicum oleoresin and turmeric oleoresin (XT), was evaluated for its effects on local and systemic immune responses using a co-infection model of experimental NE in commercial broilers. Chickens were fed from hatch with a diet supplemented with XT, or with a non-supplemented control diet, and either uninfected or orally challenged with virulent Eimeria maxima oocysts at 14 d and Clostridium perfringens at 18 d of age. Parameters of protective immunity were as follows: (1) body weight; (2) gut lesions; (3) serum levels of C. perfringens a-toxin and NE B-like (NetB) toxin; (4) serum levels of antibodies to alpha-toxin and NetB toxin; (5) levels of gene transcripts encoding pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in the intestine and spleen. Infected chickens fed the XT-supplemented diet had increased body weight and reduced gut lesion scores compared with infected birds given the non-supplemented diet. The XT-fed group also displayed decreased serum alpha-toxin levels and reduced intestinal IL-8, lipopolysaccharide-induced TNF-alpha factor (LITAF), IL-17A and IL-17F mRNA levels, while cytokine/chemokine levels in splenocytes increased in the XT-fed group, compared with the animals fed the control diet. In conclusion, the present study documents the molecular and cellular immune changes following dietary supplementation with extracts of Capsicum and turmeric that may be relevant to protective immunity against avian NE.
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